“It was phenomenal,” said bleary-eyed lead organizer Dillon Myers on Monday morning. “All nine ideas that came out of it were so well thought out. I’m really hoping [they all] move forward.”

There’s a solid reason for the winners to do so: They only receive their prize money if they incorporate and have some plan to use that funding to get their products in the hands of users. Myers said the organizers consider GiveBackHack to be a “launchpad.”

“This weekend is really just the beginning. Our goal is really to support the teams and help them move forward” — which several are planning to do, he said.

Here’s how the weekend flowed:

On Friday evening, participants gathered at Azavea in Callowhill and pitched an initial 32 ideas; nine groups formed

First prize — and $2,000 — went to Free Flow, which would offer free tampons in commercial spaces via ad-funded dispensers. The group plans to continue to develop and fund the business through Venture for America pitch competitions and hopefully launch a few test dispensers at local businesses to start, said teammate Sarah Bender, a VfA fellow who came up with the idea.

Second place went to Daisy, a disaster relief chatbot connecting those seeking aid to those offering it. (Reminds us of NeedsList — and indeed, Myers said cofounder Amanda Levinson served as a mentor.) The group won $3,500 of in-kind consulting services from Maney.

Two honorable mentions went to ethical clothing company Fashion Forward and digital donation app Lift. They each won $250 in credits for Fiverr.